if you bought it as is there is nothing you can do, unless the one who sold it to you wants to nice about it and help you out, alot of used car lots only fix them up enough for them to last a short time, unless you bought it on credit then they will fix it or let you get another one, really depends on the place, that's why you have to be careful when buying a used car, of course it also can happen with the best of cars, even new ones can start having major problems, with a new one you can fall back on the lemon law, which is still in effect in almost all states
I guess it was radioactive, and it broke down in a few seconds?
He used his shell phone!
In the context of the question, it seems like a play on words or a riddle. Turtles are not capable of calling for help in a traditional sense, as they do not possess vocal cords. However, if we are to interpret the question metaphorically, one could say that the turtle may have signaled for help by using its body language or by simply waiting for someone to pass by and notice the situation.
It didn't used to be! Spyro used to be cool!! Then Insomniac sold the rights and Sierra took over and gave him a weird face ¬.¬
It means they are old and have been worked to hard and cannot be used anymore
It is typically used in sympathy to a less well off person. Such as: "The poor dear fell down and broke his ankle."
Being seperated from one's family and sold
Just counting cars - not trucks or SUVs - Automotive News Data Center reports that there were 7,884,601 cars sold in 2008. There were 8,269,351 trucks and SUVs sold, making for a total of 16,153,952 new vehicles sold in 2008. Compared to the 2007calendar year, overall sales were down 2.5%, with car sales down 3% and truck sales down 1.9%. cars .com
My favorite Media is Virgin Media because it is fast. I have used it for six years on the same computer and it hasn't broke down once!
It is sold in one of their resale stores or given outright to a vet, usually it is sold and the money used to help down on their luck vets.
Not formally. The word broke is the past tense of 'to break' and broken is the past participle used as an adjective (a broken switch).Broke is used colloquially as an adjective to mean "bankrupt" and in the aphorism "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."
people used their lawful rights to shut down business